Oxidation of Ethanol (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry (Modular))

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Expertise

Chemistry

Oxidation of ethanol

  • Ethanol can undergo oxidation in three different ways:

    • Combustion (burning in air)

    • Aerobic oxidation

    • Treatment with an oxidising agent

Combustion

  • Alcohols undergo combustion to form carbon dioxide and water

  • The complete combustion of ethanol is as follows:

    Equation to show the complete combustion of ethanol
  • Ethanol burns readily with an almost invisible blue flame

  • School laboratories use ethanol in spirit burners as it burns cleanly and without strong odours

Aerobic Oxidation

  • Bacteria in the air (acetobacter) use oxygen from the air to oxidise the ethanol in the wine:

ethanol + oxygen → ethanoic acid + water

  • The acidic, vinegary taste of wine which has been left open for several days is due to the presence of ethanoic acid

  • This is what happens to wine when it is left open as the microbial oxidation of ethanol will produce a weak solution of the carboxylic acid, ethanoic acid, the same acid used in vinegar

Treatment with an oxidising agent

  • Alcohols undergo oxidation to produce carboxylic acids when treated with oxidising agents

  • When ethanol is heated with  potassium dichromate(VI) solution in sulfuric acid, the ethanol oxidises to ethanoic acid

  • The equation for the reaction is:

CH3CH2OH + [O]  →  CH3COOH + H2O

  • The oxidising agent is represented by the symbol for oxygen in square brackets

  • The reaction is slow so the mixture is heated to its boiling point for about an hour; to avoid the substances evaporating a condenser is placed above the reaction flask that prevents volatile liquids from escaping

  • During the reaction the potassium dichromate turns from orange to green

The oxidation of ethanol

Equipment showing ethanol being heated under reflux

Ethanol can be oxidised by heating it with potassium dichromate in sulfuric acid. The solution turns  from orange to green during the reaction

Exam Tip

Be careful when writing the equation for the combustion of ethanol- students often forget to include the oxygen in the ethanol when balancing the equation.

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Alexandra Brennan

Author: Alexandra Brennan

Alex studied Biochemistry at Newcastle University before embarking upon a career in teaching. With nearly 10 years of teaching experience, Alex has had several roles including Chemistry/Science Teacher, Head of Science and Examiner for AQA and Edexcel. Alex’s passion for creating engaging content that enables students to succeed in exams drove her to pursue a career outside of the classroom at SME.